
At the Collection Lambert, German artist Constantin Nitsche presents his first major monographic exhibition in a public institution.
In the basement rooms of the Hôtel de Montfaucon, he exhibits some twenty works specially created in his Marseille studio.
Constantin Nitsche's paintings are sensitive constructions in which characters and settings from his everyday life mingle with fictitious objects and situations, and with references drawn from the history of modern and classical art and cinema.
Each of these stagings is the result of a skilful balancing act through which the artist continually re-enacts his relationship with painting and the world.
Like him, the subjects he paints exist only in the breach, in search of their rightful place, affected by the places they inhabit.
Animals, still lifes or human beings - his wife, his children, Joseph, an artist friend - are as if suspended in space and time, ethereal, their gaze inscrutable.
In rooms with luminous ceilings reminiscent of Stanley Kubrick's 2001 Space Odyssey, the works follow one another like so many epiphanies from the artist's memory, embarked on a choreography whose movement would replay Tchaikovsky's Waltz of the Flowers.
Constantin Nitsche's paintings are sensitive constructions in which characters and settings from his everyday life mingle with fictitious objects and situations, and with references drawn from the history of modern and classical art and cinema.
Each of these stagings is the result of a skilful balancing act through which the artist continually re-enacts his relationship with painting and the world.
Like him, the subjects he paints exist only in the breach, in search of their rightful place, affected by the places they inhabit.
Animals, still lifes or human beings - his wife, his children, Joseph, an artist friend - are as if suspended in space and time, ethereal, their gaze inscrutable.
In rooms with luminous ceilings reminiscent of Stanley Kubrick's 2001 Space Odyssey, the works follow one another like so many epiphanies from the artist's memory, embarked on a choreography whose movement would replay Tchaikovsky's Waltz of the Flowers.
Rates
Rates
From 26 October 2025 to 25 January 2026
From 26 October 2025 to 25 January 2026
Full price
12€
Reduced price
8€
Student
5€
Opening times
Opening times
From 26 October 2025 until 25 January 2026
From 26 October 2025 until 25 January 2026
Monday
Closed
Tuesday
Closed
Wednesday
14:00 - 18:00
Thursday
14:00 - 18:00
Friday
14:00 - 18:00
Saturday
11:00 - 18:00
Sunday
11:00 - 18:00